Abstract
In heart muscle, the intracellular carnitine concentration is approximately 40 times higher than the plasma carnitine concentration, suggesting the existence of an active transport process. At physiological serum carnitine concentrations (44 microM), 80% of total myocardial carnitine uptake occurs via a carrier-mediated transport system. The mechanism of this carrier-mediated transport was studied in isolated perfused rat hearts. Carnitine transport showed an absolute dependence on the extracellular sodium concentration. The rate of carnitine transport was linearly related to the perfusate sodium concentration at every perfusate carnitine concentration examined (15-100 microM). Total removal of extracellular sodium completely abolished the carrier-mediated transport. Decreasing the perfusate potassium concentration from a control of 5.9 to 0.6 mM stimulated transport by 35%, whereas increasing the extracellular potassium concentration from 5.9 to 25 mM reduced transport by 60%. The carrier-mediated transport was inversely proportional to the extracellular potassium concentration. Acetylcholine (10(-3) M), isoproterenol (10(-7) M), or ouabain (10(-3) did not alter the rate of carnitine transport. Addition of tetrodotoxin (10(-5) stimulated carnitine transport by about 40%, while gramicidin S (5 X 10(-6) M) decreased uptake by about 18% relative to control. The data provide evidence that carnitine transport by cardiac cells occurs by a Na+-dependent cotransport mechanism that is dependent on the Na+ electrochemical gradient.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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